Extractive Industry Engagement

The Extractive Industry (mining, petroleum, logging, and agri-business) is closely associated with dynamics and practices that contribute to habitat change, changes in population settlements, and increased population mobility three factors critical to triggering the “spill-over” of a new infectious disease in remote “hot spot” areas and its “amplification and spread” into highly connected population settlements.

USAID’s Emerging Pandemic Threats 2 program continues to engage the extractive industry and associated stakeholders to develop industry-accepted mitigation and preparedness approaches to lower the risk of emerging infectious diseases.

Partners

The IDRAM Initiative
Through the Extraction Industry Infectious Disease Risk Assessment and Management (IDRAM) Initiative, Chatham House aims to leverage its position as a neutral, objective, and credible convener and platform to help the extraction industry interact with international development and finance institutions, national government stakeholders and science leaders to address the importance and complexity of emerging disease threats.

Proposed Extractive Industry Audit and Planning Tools

EPT partners drafted two documents to help mining, timber, and oil and gas companies detect whether work site conditions favor emergence and spread of zoonotic diseases such as Lassa, Marburg, and Ebola fevers. The documents are currently in draft form.

Audit: Extractive Industry Work Site Assessment Tool

The Audit Checklist for an Operating Facility [PDF, 1MB] is designed for Environment, Health and Safety Officers to assess extractive industry work site vulnerabilities to zoonotic disease exposure and transmission. Although the checklist and the accompanying mitigation measures are focused on zoonotic diseases, the identified vulnerabilities may apply to the broader context of maintaining worker and community health.